- Acadians - Wikipedia
The Acadians (French: Acadiens; European French: [akadjɛ̃], Acadian French: [akad͡zjɛ̃]) are an ethnic group descended from the French who settled in the New France colony of Acadia during the 17th and 18th centuries
- Acadian Ambulance Service | Medical Transport When You Need It
Our company’s six divisions — Acadian Ambulance Service, Acadian Air Med, Executive Aircraft Charter Service, Acadian Total Security, National EMS Academy and Safety Management Systems — offer diverse career opportunities
- Acadian Companies | Knowing Life Matters Since 1971
As Acadian employees, we have a great deal of pride in our work, and we see every day as an opportunity to make a difference Our passion and compassion guide our actions as we treat more than just the injury or ailment, but the person as a whole
- Acadian | History | Britannica
Acadian, descendant of the French settlers of Acadia (French: Acadie), the French colony on the Atlantic coast of North America in what is now the Maritime Provinces of Canada
- Acadian History - Acadian Genealogy - Historical Acadian . . .
Acadia was the eastern outpost and flank of the French and British empires in continental North America When Samuel Argall destroyed the colony of Port-Royal in 1613, it marked the beginning of Anglo-French rivalry in the area
- Acadian Genealogy – Find Acadian Ancestors - FamilySearch
Acadia, a name given to some French communities and culture in the New World, emerged in Nova Scotia in the early 1600s Settled by hardy and jubilant Francophones, Acadia was among the first permanent settlements of French-speakers in North America
- Cajun Acadian Arcadian — Wordorigins. org
Cajun is a variant of the French Acadian, which in turn is from the Greek Ἀρκαδία (Arcadia), a mountainous region of the Peloponnesus in Greece which became a metaphor of an ideal, rustic life, such as that lived in the mythical Golden Age We see this metaphorical sense of Arcadia being used in English by the late sixteenth century
|